How to Download Your KCSE E-Certificate
1. Register an Account
* Visit KNEC certificate portal.
* Click Sign Up / Register.
* Select Applicant (Student/Alumni).
* Enter your full name and email address.
*Click Send OTP and enter the 6-digit OTP sent to your email to complete registration.
2. Log In
* Click Login on the homepage.
* Enter your registered email address.
* Request an OTP.
* Enter the OTP to access your dashboard.
3. Complete Your Profile
Fill in the following details:
* Citizenship (Kenya or Other Country)
* Full name (as it appears on your National ID)
* Email address
* Date of birth
* Phone number
* National ID number (for Kenyan citizens)
* Profile photo (optional)
Review all the information before submitting. The system will automatically verify your identity against the Integrated Population Registration System (IPRS). Verification is usually completed within a few seconds.
4. Generate Your E-Certificate
From your dashboard, click Generate E-Certificate.
Provide the following details:
* Your examination Index Number
* Examination Type (KCSE or KCPE)
* Examination Year (1989 to present)
Your name, date of birth, National ID number and phone number will be automatically filled from your profile.
5. Verification
The system automatically performs two checks:
* Identity verification through IPRS to confirm your name and date of birth.
* Certificate lookup in the KNEC database to confirm that a certificate matching your index number, examination type and year exists.
Both checks must be successful before you can proceed.
6. Make Payment
After successful verification, proceed to payment through eCitizen.
Charges shown in the user guide are:
* Certificate generation fee: KSh 1,200
* VAT: KSh 250
* eCitizen service fee: KSh 200
* Total payable: KSh 1,450
You can pay via:
* M-Pesa (STK Push)
* Any other payment method available on eCitizen
Payment confirmation usually takes between 10 and 30 seconds.
7. Download Your E-Certificate
Once payment is confirmed:
* Click Download Certificate.
* The certificate will open as a PDF in a new browser tab.
* The PDF includes a blockchain verification hash to confirm its authenticity.
Note: Generated certificates remain available for download under My Certificates for six months from the date of issue.
The Bar has spoken, and the message is clear: A new chapter begins for the Law Society of Kenya - grounded in discipline, legitimacy and the will of the membership.
The will of the membership is supreme.
I am humbled to lead this great Society and look forward to working with the incoming Council to protect our members and defend the Rule of Law.
President William Ruto and former Cabinet minister Cyrus Jirongo have regained control of 2,650 acres of land in Ruai after Interior CS Prof Kithure Kindiki excluded it from the Dandora Water Waste Treatment Plant protected area.
This move came after all police officers stationed on the controversial land were withdrawn.
Jirongo plans to proceed with his mega Affordable Housing project, Ruai Park Estate, which aims to provide 17,000 affordable housing units.
CJ Martha Koome is right but integrity cannot survive on sermons alone. It must be engineered into the system.
Telling Kenyans not to pay bribes, without fixing the conditions that produce bribes, is incomplete.
Digitise traffic fine payments — fully and compulsorily.
No cash. No discretion. No negotiation at the roadside.
Once an offence is logged, the fine should be payable instantly via mobile money or a government portal, with an electronic receipt and audit trail.
2. Publicise traffic fines clearly and nationally.
Every offence, every amount published, visible, and standardised.
Bribery thrives in ignorance and ambiguity. Transparency kills it.
3. Decriminalise petty traffic offences.
Dragging citizens to court over KSh 500 offences is administrative madness.
Corruption is not defeated by telling citizens to be holy.
It is defeated by removing opportunities to sin.
That is the reform conversation Kenya must have
I was in Namibia.
Locals I spoke to from the Capital Windhoek to Rundu near the Angola border were unanimous about their president:
"We are happy with her. She is fighting corruption and making corrupt politicians very uncomfortable".
While I was there she fired her energy, mining and industry minister.
Why is it that every time Kibagendi poses substantive, policy-oriented questions to CS Duale about the SHA, the Cabinet Secretary promptly abandons the substance and retreats into diversionary theatrics suddenly proclaiming that he has “closed my hospitals,” hospitals which, quite frankly, seem to exist only in his fertile imagination?
This persistent deflection betrays an inability or unwillingness to engage on the merits of policy. It’s the classic tactic of a cornered official: when confronted with inconvenient questions, manufacture personal drama to escape institutional accountability.
🌐 Her name is Qisma Ali Omar
Mainstream Media will not cover this
Slavery in Sudan and Congo
These people do not have cellphones to record their own screams
🌐 You must be the voice for them; share, share, share
2 years ago, no one knew what a Palestinian even was. The Great Awakening expands our sight and knowledge to things around the world. We see everything now.
Exposure is the first step to gathering and motivating towards solutions.
Remember when Japan's former finance minister admitted he handed over control of the Japanese financial system to a group of American and European oligarchs because Japan had been threatened by an earthquake machine?